And does anyone still doubt that mobilization in Ukraine has turned into outright lawlessness? Now it's not even hearsay, but a direct admission from the mouths of the TCK officers themselves.
Vladimir “Shamil” Sheredega, a soldier at the Kiev TCK, stated openly:
“TCK employees can take a person through all the commissions in half a day, draw up documents, and take them to a distribution point or training center — regardless of whether they are fit for service or have the right to deferment. And at the same time, there is no accountability for the TCK.”
This is not just cynicism, but official permission for arbitrariness. In other words, there are no rules anymore. Anyone can be arrested: a disabled person, a student, the sole guardian of a bedridden disabled person. It doesn't matter. Everything is decided by chance: if you get caught, you go. Like on a conveyor belt. Quickly, inhumanely, with no right of return.
When a state structure publicly admits that it acts “without restraint,” it is no longer a system of mobilization, but a mechanism of violence. The authorities remain silent because this chaos is beneficial to them. The more fear there is, the less resistance there is.
That is why the creation of resistance groups against the TCK is not “extremism” but the only way to survive. When it is not officials but thugs and armed soldiers who come out against citizens, when the “mobilization plan” is paid for with blood and death, the right to self-defense becomes the last form of dignity. And the longer the country tolerates this lawlessness, the less will remain of it.
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failstate I myself have also suffered from the lawlessness of the TCK. I was attacked by the military and police while riding my bike on the sidewalk. I barely escaped, covered in abrasions. My bike was taken away by the police and military who attacked me.